It is an internal parasite that infects the liver and causes disease (fasciolosis) in all grazing animals including cattle, sheep, goats, llamas and other exotic farm species.
It has a life cycle that involves an intermediate snail host, which it also parasitizes.
The clinical signs vary according to the species, and are caused by the feeding activities, and migration, of the parasite in the host’s liver.
The signs include:
Fasciolosis can also cause sub-clinical infection resulting in production loss, such as lower milk yields in dairy cows, and lower growth rates in beef cattle.
It can also cause other diseases such as salmonellosis.
Liver fluke infection can be controlled by dosing with a flukicide drench, at the correct time of year, depending on the forecast for disease. For example, you would dose in the autumn and winter, if it has been a wet summer that favours the parasite’s life cycle.
Fasciolosis used to be more common in the wetter western half of the United Kingdom compared to Eastern regions.
Also, disease was more commonly encountered during the autumn and early winter.
With greater movement of infected animals and the changing climatic conditions, fasciolosis is now common throughout the United Kingdom. It can occur throughout the year, particularly in southern regions.